Running or travelling skating, as distinguished from
those gracefull evolutions on the ice which have no object
but their own performance, has been named "fen skating"
from the locality in which it is most practised,
and brought to its highest perfection.
...
The reader must not, however, suppose that this style of skating is
necessarily local or circumscribed. It might well be practised, and it
is the desire of the authors to promote its practice, in other
localities where sheets or tracts of readily frozen waters are to be
found.
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Last edited by David Dermott
November 2, 2014 | History
Handbook of Fen Skating by N. Goodman, A. Goodman first published in 1882
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Book Details
Table of Contents
iv. List of Illustrations by Albert Goodman
vi. Preface
1. Fen Skating as a sport by Neville Goodman
25. History of skating by Neville Goodman
73. Skates and skating by Albert Goodman
149. Map of the fen district by Sidney Tebbutt
155. Geography and travelling by Neville Goodman
194. Appendix A Rules of Hockey (Bandy)
196. Appendix B List of Rivers and drains
201. Appendix C: Description of Routes
216. Index
Edition Notes
Edition Identifiers
Work Identifiers
Excerpts
Page 1-2,
added by David Dermott.
This excerpt defines "fen skating" but notes that this style (skate travelling) can and should be practiced
in any place where suitable ice surfaces occur.
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History
- Created February 13, 2013
- 13 revisions
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November 2, 2014 | Edited by David Dermott | Added new cover |
March 3, 2013 | Edited by David Dermott | Contents changeArthur-> Albert ; Appendix c and Index |
February 15, 2013 | Edited by David Dermott | add by statement |
February 14, 2013 | Edited by David Dermott | contents - try again |
February 13, 2013 | Created by David Dermott | Added new book. |